Highlights from 25 years of Linux in business

Linux has come a long way in the last quarter century, starting as a not-so-ambitious project, to something that literally runs the modern economy. In these slides we explore 25 major stories from these 25 years that changed the business world.

S.u.S.E. was founded on 2 September 1992 in Germany by Roland Dyroff, Burchard Steinbild, Hubert Mantel and Thomas Fehr. The company was selling a product based on one of the oldest Linux distribution Slackware.

Marc Ewing, known to wear a red hat as he walked between classes at Carnegie Mellon University, created his own Linux distribution and called it … Red Hat Linux. Ewing released his software in October 1994 (he called it the Halloween release). Later, Red Hat Linux became the most popular enterprise distribution.

S.u.S.E created and started shipping its own Linux distribution called S.u.S.E Linux. It was based on Jurix, whose creator Florian La Roche had joined the company. The first version was called "S.u.S.E Linux 4.2", a reference to "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy," where 42 is the "Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything."

SuSE, Caldera International (later SCO Group), Conectiva and Turbolinux joined to create United Linux, a standardized Linux distribution for the enterprise. That was one of the first attempts in the Linux world to reduce duplication of engineering work.

SCO Group (formerly Caldera International, which backed United Linux) started claiming that Linux infringed on SCO’s UNIX System V source code, and that it was an illegal derivative of UNIX. SCO sued IBM for $1 billion and asked for license fee. Microsoft signed a licensing deal with SCO, a move that gave "heavyweight backing to SCO's intellectual-property claims and helps Microsoft combat Linux," wrote CNET's Martin LaMonica.

Andy Rubin co-founded Android, Inc to develop smart devices. After realizing that there wasn't a market for such devices, they shifted focus towards creating a mobile operating system that would compete with Symbian and Microsoft Windows. In 2005, Google acquired Android.

Mark Shuttleworth funded and founded the Ubuntu Linux distribution. Ubuntu was based on Debian and went on to become one of the most popular Linux distributions on desktop and cloud. Shuttleworth founded a company called Canonical Ltd, to create a business around Ubuntu Linux.

Microsoft and Novell (the owner of SUSE back then) signed a patent agreement to cover their products. The deal was seen as Novell’s validation of Microsoft’s claims that Linux infringes upon its patents, which infuriated the Linux community and dented Novell’s reputation.

In a move aimed to give it technology independence, the NYSE built a new hybrid market trading system running Linux. This was the beginning of the end for UNIX and rise of Linux in mission critical businesses.

The Open Source Development Labs (OSDL) and the Free Standards Group (FSG) merged to created the Linux Foundation, a non-profit trade association that has become home to many Linux and open source projects. The foundation also sponsors the work of top Linux developers, including Linus Torvalds and Greg Kroah-Hartman.

Samsung collaborated with Intel, EFL project and LiMo to create Tizen, a brand new Linux-based operating system. Tizen targets a wide range of devices and is often seen as Samsung’s backup plan for Android.

In 2013 Solomon Hykes renamed his company dotCloud to Docker Inc. Docker popularized the concept of Linux containers in the enterprise world and has become one of the hottest enterprise startups in recent times. Docker Inc shut down the dotCloud platform as a service (Paas) offering in February 2016.

CoreOS, developer of the lightweight, Linux-based distributed operating system by the same name, is the youngest Linux company. However, the operating system is not the primary product of the company, which builds technologies to automate, orchestrate, deploy and manage containers.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella took a U-turn from the company’s previous hostility towards Linux and announced that ‘Microsoft loves Linux’ at a media event touting the company's cloud offerings. This change of heart had everything to do with Microsoft’s recognition that a growing share of its Azure cloud customers run Linux.